Wednesday, 25 September 2013

Yo-yo writing

I have WIP1, which is resting - I love the story, but I'm not sure it should be the next book, I think it would work better as the one-after-next.

So, I brought WIP2 out from under the bed and started to read it, loved it, hated it, tried to re-write it, decided it was perfect as it was, hated it...

... and searched out WIP3... Meh. Yeah, all right, I guess. Needs so much work... hmmm, but if I just take this sub-plot out, tweak this character, change this woman to a man... Oooh, I love this novel... Wait, no I hate it!

Am I making too much work for myself, should I just get WIP1 ready to submit?

BUT it's not the right story...

Oooh, that's a great line I've just woken up with in my head. Now, does it fit it WIP 2 or WIP3?

If you're in the middle of working on your most favourite story ever, I salute you - and feel a little jealous. I know I'm pretty lucky to have three great projects available for me to work on (which doesn't even consider the fact I've got another one gathering dust that Hubby thinks I should finish!) but there's something stopping me. I've got this horrible feeling that the stories are too big for me, that I won't be able to do justice to the characters and their plights.

38 comments:

First of all, NOTHING is too big for you. Okay, it might take you a while to figure out how best to get the story out, but you WILL! I don't know which WIP is which here, but I muchly love creepy Abe, and if you don't get that out soon, I might cry! :p

Thank you - for your info WIP1 is Abe, WIP2 is depressing and WIP3 is the hotel (yep, that's still getting an occasional airing, just because I love that countdown opening so darn much!) Please don't cry though :-)

I understand your mixed feelings Annalisa. I've started the second book in my crime series. I've also started a standalone novel that is a different genre and just something I'd love to do and for some bizarre reason another crime series character has popped into my head so I have wrote some notes for it.

How do we look at that problem now? In a practical way I'd suggest. If our writing is a long term career, which book Should we work on first and with full concentration. Giving it our all, it won't take as long to move into the next one as dilly-dallying with decisions as we both are doing.

For me - it's now down to two. The good thing with your decision is that your first draft is done.

Yes, all my stories exist in some form or another, and to be honest, it's good to have options rather than nothing at all. I agree, I need to choose and put all my energy into it. I hope you make your decision soon too Rebecca :-)

Just last night I was looking at a pair of WIPs that haven't seen the light of day in a while. One I love but just don't have time for right now, and the other I am intrigued by but wouldn't know what to do with it if I did have time for it. Someday...

It is a nice problem to have, and hopefully all these stories will see fruition at some point! You could set aside a few weeks for each one where you focus on it exclusively, and then see how things stand. I'm the opposite. I have tunnel vision with whatever I'm writing currently, and if I go off it, then it gets shelved. That means I've got a few WIPs behind me which I'd like to work on, but they feel too distant. So, I'm hoping my current project will be the one!

I think we all go through a love hate relationship with our stories. I do understand the thought that some stories are are too big for my current level of ability, but that passes as you delve into them.

You've summed up exactly how I feel - my novels are too big for me! I feel as though I'm going to get lost in them, lose my way, lose the plot! Thinking of each chapter as a short story doesn't help, either! Just choose one and write it, without worrying about whether it's the next book. It will be one of them, anyway!

I completely sympathize. I do the same thing. I love it, hate it, put it down, pick it up, it's fantastic, hate it. It's ridiculous, but it's the fragile ego of a writer at work! Perhaps ask your CPs and betas what they like best.

Although I don't have anything as big as a novel or book in the progress, I have several writing commitments to keep up with. Trying to come up with ideas, get them from thought to paper is overwhelming sometimes. I have to break them down, keep index cards with ideas for each project and then just pick one and work on it a bit. Not easy though-- can't imagine with big projects like the ones you're juggling!

I miss the writing for fun days. I hate the constant worry and if I let it, it shuts me down. My mom told me people were asking her how many copies I've sold, and it gave me the worst insecurity. I'm tired of being judged, I just want to write stories! (At least this is what causes my pendulum of love and hate to swing back and forth...the worry over success!)

Hi Annalisa .. I think Yo-Yoing is easy to do with many things - unfortunately! I certainly oscillate around my blogging subjects - but then I'm not trying to keep characters, scenes and chapters in some cohesive force through thousands of words .. I so admire writers the more I hear!

Good luck - it'll sift through the quagmire and hit the light - you're still writing and that's the main thing .. Hilary

Totally empathise - I'm on Chapter 4 of a new children's book (No.3 of a trilogy), rewriting an existing previously pubbed title and halfway through editing another. I'm enjoying the variety but every now and then I get burnt out and have to step away. Yo-yo writing is a great phrase and describes the process perfectly!